YouTube’s New Shorts Money‑Making Move: A Game Plan to Outpace TikTok
Why Shorts? A Quick Look
YouTube’s got a new way to keep creators glued to the platform: ads on Shorts, the bite‑sized videos that feel more like TikTok but with a brand heritage that’s hard to ignore.
- Shorts have already pulled in 1.5 billion monthly viewers.
- For the past few years, YouTube has tried to claw back creators from TikTok’s shiny offering.
- Now it’s putting a money‑back guarantee that aims to bring the creators home.
The Deal: 45% Share for Creators
Starting September 20, a creator who drops a 45‑second video on Shorts can keep 45 % of the ad revenue that finally lands in their account.
- That’s a 10‑point dip from the standard 55 % split for full‑length videos.
- Saying “But it’s cheaper for us to cut a feature and still pay them,” YouTube’s VP Tara Walpert Levy explained the math.
- It’s a sacrifice to offset a $100 million developer fund that keeps the platform vibrant.
Crunching Numbers: Who Wins?
Google reported a $14.2 billion haul from YouTube ad sales in the first half of the year–that’s a 9 % jump from 2021. But sales are plateauing, and analysts point to TikTok’s juggernaut pull, plus the bigger economy.
- Ad revenue growth has slowed: the last quarterly update showed the smallest climb in three years.
- TikTok’s $1 billion U.S. creator fund (S$1.4 billion) remains a stiff competition.
- For creators, the lineup looks like: Shorts (45 %) vs. full‑length (55 %) vs. TikTok’s flagship split.
Kris Collins: “YouTube is Helping Creators Make Stuff in Multiple Formats”
Stylist‑turned‑YouTuber Kris Collins (aka Kallmekris) gave a cheer of approval.
“Other platforms are just trying to make you 15 seconds of fame,” she said. “But YouTube’s taking a different angle – we’re not just your one‑slide, we’re the whole show.”
Her voice lights up the new revenue-sharing promise with a dash of upbeat realism.
Threads Spin: The Big Picture
YouTube’s Shorts mission feels like a battle of “small but mighty.” TikTok’s “1‑billion‑user” lion, and YouTube’s “classic long‑form” legacy. With a new revenue‑share program, the giant is saying: we’ll keep the drip for you, even when the drops are smaller.
In the end, this is a parody of the streaming competition turned into a real catch‑up exercise. If you’re a creator, the math is simple: maximise your content, spread it across Shorts and long‑form, and let the money flow.
Bottom Line
Shorts is back, smarter, and now with a financial edge. As creators watch the analytics shift from the “big picture” to the “next 45 seconds,” the plot thickens: the platform battle will soon look very, very economic. Enjoy the narrative. Let your videos be the headline.
